“A movie, for me, is a completely heart-, gut-level experience. And occasionally, the mind comes into play to sort of engage what’s happening…but mostly movies are not observed in the mind. And often, when your energy goes into your mind to watch a movie, you disengage from the story, and it takes a little while to get pulled back.” –Bruce Joel Rubin, Screenwriter

“The movie is gonna exist alongside the book. But I think you can get in trouble if you don’t give the movie a life of its own. If you don’t have time to tell it in the movie, you can’t assume the audience knows it, because you have to tell your story for people who haven’t read the book, and who are maybe gonna read the book later as well.” “ Gomez,” Ron Livingston

“You can create the illusion of a novelistic feeling in a film, but it’s not really what film does best, for the most part. I think films are probably closer to a short story. Films work toward a single cataclysmic event…most of the time at the end, and that’s a short story: ‘When is it gonna happen? How is it gonna happen?’” –Robert Schwentke, Director

“…there is a presence that goes beyond death. I play with that a lot in the movie Ghost. I play with it a little bit in Jacob’s Ladder. It’s a theme I really care about. The great love stories are always stories that are ultimately about loss…about not being able to have forever, in the physical sense, the one you love.

“As a writer, I get this enormous joy of knowing I get two hours at any given moment to talk to the world. But I realized early on that each movie is like a sentence, an idea, one idea.

“And a career, if you’re lucky to have a career, is a paragraph. And that’s what I want. I want to be able to have one paragraph of understanding that I can share with the world. And all of these films put together, I think, create that paragraph. And Time Traveler’s Wife fits into that paradigm perfectly for me.

“It’s not a full 100-percent statement of what it means to be free of death, but it is a real intimation of love continuing beyond time.” –Bruce Joel Rubin

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“Who knows where the time goes?” –Sandy Denny/Judy Collins/Eva Cassidy

Credit: filmbuffonline

A Meditation and Reflection on Time: All we did, all we have to do, all left undone. Another year has passed, as have some friends and relatives. Another year ahead, with or without resolutions. But “Time Marches On…”

And:

“Every person passing through this life will unknowingly leave something and take something away. Most of this ‘something’ cannot be seen or heard or numbered or scientifically detected or counted. It’s what we leave in the minds of other people and what they leave in ours. Memory. The census doesn’t count it. Nothing counts without it.” –Robert Fulghum

Remember:

“What matters in life is not what happens to you but what you remember and how you remember it.” –Gabriel Garcia Marquez